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Parents' Ethnic-Racial Socialization Practices: A Review of Research and Directions for Future Study
Hughes, Diane; Rodriguez, James; Smith, Emilie P.; Johnson, Deborah J.; Stevenson, Howard C.; Spicer, Paul – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Recently, there has been an emergence of literature on the mechanisms through which parents transmit information, values, and perspectives about ethnicity and race to their children, commonly referred to as racial or ethnic socialization. This literature has sought to document the nature of such socialization, its antecedents in parents' and…
Descriptors: Parent Influence, Socialization, Futures (of Society), Ethnicity
Peer reviewedLeve, Leslie D.; Kim, Hyoun K.; Pears, Katherine C. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2005
Childhood temperament and family environment have been shown to predict internalizing and externalizing behavior; however, less is known about how temperament and family environment interact to predict changes in problem behavior. We conducted latent growth curve modeling on a sample assessed at ages 5, 7, 10, 14, and 17 (N = 337). Externalizing…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Family Environment, Depression (Psychology), Children
Sameroff, Arnold J.; MacKenzie, Michael J. – Zero to Three (J), 2003
In this article, the creator of the transactional model and a colleague give an overview of how the model emerged as well as its principal elements. For most of the 20th century, scientists believed that brain damage was the cause of a child's cognitive, social, or emotional problems. Later, researchers found that babies were likely to have…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Well Being, Child Development, Child Psychology
Lord, Catherine; Shulman, Cory; DiLavore, Pamela – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2004
Background: For many years, researchers and clinicians have described parent reports of an unusual developmental phenomenon in a substantial minority of children with Autistic Spectrum Disorders (ASD), the acquisition and then loss of communication skills during the second year of life. Methods: As part of a longitudinal study of 110 children…
Descriptors: Autism, Developmental Delays, Communication Skills, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Brown, Keith; Young, Natasha – Children & Society, 2005
This paper provides further evidence to challenge the scepticism of successful interprofessional working. It is a story of a project to support families and children, more specifically, isolated mothers, and the use of continuous quality improvement and action research methodologies to engage a community and change service provision. Based on…
Descriptors: Evidence, Community Needs, Play, Action Research
Chuang, Susan S. – Social Development, 2006
This study examined Taiwanese-Canadian mothers' conceptions of personal freedom in everyday situations for their children and the influence of acculturation on their beliefs. Forty mothers of six- to eight-year-old children participated in a semistructured interview and sorting task. Interview responses revealed that, regardless of acculturation,…
Descriptors: Freedom, Mothers, Interests, Acculturation
Chew, Li-Jin; Takanohashi, Asako; Bell, Michael – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2006
Inflammation during the perinatal period has become a recognized risk factor for developmental brain injuries over the past decade or more. To fully understand the relationship between inflammation and brain development, a comprehensive knowledge about the immune system within the brain is essential. Microglia are resident immune cells within the…
Descriptors: Injuries, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Physiology, Anatomy
Armstrong, F. Daniel – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2006
Successful treatment of many childhood diseases once considered terminal has resulted in the emergence of long-term effects of the disease or consequences of treatment that were previously unrecognized. Many of these long-term effects involve the central nervous system (CNS) and are developmental in the way that they emerge over time. Because we…
Descriptors: Chronic Illness, Children, Anatomy, Brain
Willinger, Ulrike; Eisenwort, Brigitte – Behavioral Medicine, 2005
The authors' objective in this article was to explore the accuracy of mothers' estimates concerning their children's developmental functioning, especially with respect to vocabulary and gross motor development, by comparing the results of diagnostic tests administered to both the children and their mothers. The authors studied 55 children with…
Descriptors: Mother Attitudes, Diagnostic Tests, Motor Development, Language Acquisition
Courchesne, Eric – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2004
Due to the relatively late age of clinical diagnosis of autism, the early brain pathology of children with autism has remained largely unstudied. The increased use of retrospective measures such as head circumference, along with a surge of MRI studies of toddlers with autism, have opened a whole new area of research and discovery. Recent studies…
Descriptors: Autism, Clinical Diagnosis, Pathology, Brain
Page, Timothy F.; Heller, Sherryl Scott; Boris, Neil W. – Residential Treatment for Children & Youth, 2006
Standardized clinical assessments from the point of view of children are rare. A standardized narrative assessment measure, developed to assess children's perceptions of their caregiving environments, the Narrative Story-Stem Technique (NSST), was used with two fraternal twins, age 8, with histories of severe maltreatment and multiple foster…
Descriptors: Residential Care, Twins, Young Children, Foster Care
Robson, Elsbeth – Journal of Rural Studies, 2004
Children are increasingly recognised by geographers and other social scientists as independent actors who make valuable (albeit often overlooked) economic contributions to households and society. Hausa children in rural Northern Nigeria are highly mobile and play important economic roles supporting married women who spend much time in their walled…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Social Science Research, Rural Areas
Crespi, Tony D.; Gustafson, Amy L.; Borges, Silvia M. – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2006
School psychologists are increasingly being confronted with a wide spectrum of psychological, psychosocial, familial, and home-school issues impacting child development. With one in six children raised in alcoholic families, with divorce impacting approximately 60% of families, and with such issues as teenage pregnancy, parental neglect, as well…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Pregnancy, Group Counseling, Child Development
Language-Specific Effects on Number Computation in Toddlers: A European Cross-Linguistic Cartography
Lubin, Amelie; Pineau, Arlette; Hodent, Celia; Houde, Olivier – Cognitive Development, 2006
A fundamental question in developmental science is how brains with and without language compute numbers. Measuring young children's verbal reactions in Spain and Finland, we show that, although there is a general arithmetic ability for small numbers that is shared by monkeys and preverbal infants, the development of such initial knowledge in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cartography, Numbers, Computation
Chadwick, O.; Cuddy, M.; Kusel, Y.; Taylor, E. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2005
Background: While a number of studies have examined the development of skills in children with intellectual disabilities (ID), most have been cross-sectional, most have been concerned with particular syndromes such as Down's syndrome or autism and few have attempted to identify factors associated with improvements in skills. Methods: From a sample…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Daily Living Skills, Severe Mental Retardation, Behavior Rating Scales

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